Nationalist calls over Brexit are ‘foolish’

16-02-2017: Traditional Unionist Voice leader Jim Allister pictured at the TUV manifesto launch that took place in the Park Avenue Hotel, Belfast.

Published:15:50Thursday 16 February 2017

The Irish Republic, not Northern Ireland, should be seeking special EU status after Brexit according to the leader of the TUV.

Jim Allister branded as “foolish” nationalist calls for Northern Ireland to secure a special EU designation after the UK leaves the EU but he said it might make sense for the Republic of Ireland.

Launching his party’s Assembly election manifesto, Mr Allister predicted a “glorious” future for the UK outside the European Union and said people south of the border may be tempted to follow its lead.

But, while the Republic remained in the EU, the arch Eurosceptic said the Dublin government should press for special status to enable the country to strike separate trade deals with the UK.

“Brexit is a glorious opportunity,” he said.

“It liberates us from the restraints, the shackles of Brussels. It sets our vision on the growth parts of the world, rather than tying us to the moribund EU economy.

“I do think that in time, as Brexit proves to be the success that it will be, that our neighbours, though it will be a matter entirely for them, will come to see the wisdom of following us out of the EU and pursuing growth in parts of the world where the trade now is.”

“You can’t have special status within the EU for a region that’s going to be outside the EU and we are going to be outside the EU completely and absolutely,” he said.

“If there is a case for special status maybe it’s a case for special status for the Republic of Ireland, as a member of the EU.

“Special status within it, so it would be liberated to trade with its biggest partner, the UK, without the restraints of EU tariff.

“So if there’s a case for special status it doesn’t lie in respect of this part of the island of Ireland, it lies elsewhere and maybe that’s what the government in Dublin should be focusing on.”

Turning to domestic politics, Mr Allister said of the “thousands” of people he had met on the canvas trail he had “yet to meet a voter who doesn’t agree that Stormont is a mess”.

A mainstay of the TUV manifesto is the party’s enduring demand for the system of mandatory coalition government at Stormont, where the main parties are guaranteed a place in the powersharing executive by right, to be replaced by a system of voluntary coalition.

“We must abandon the inequity of mandatory coalition and move to a coalition of the willing,” he said.

He said discretion on who takes a seat in government should lie with the people, not the parties.

“Under mandatory coalition that discretion has been removed from the people and bestowed on the parties and if they hold onto a handful of MLAs then, as of right, they are said to be entitled to be in government and that means that the discretion of whether or not those parties are in government lies not with the voters but lies with the parties.

“That discretion should never rest with the parties, that discretion should rest with the people.”

Mr Allister said if a new system of voluntary coalition is not introduced then direct rule from Westminster should be re-imposed.

The party proposes a model of direct rule whereby MLAs would still sit in the Assembly but the ministers in charge of departments would be from Westminster.

“This time we must make direct rule accountable and we do that by making them (the ministers) put their laws through the Assembly, keeping the scrutiny functions of the Assembly and in that way putting checks and balances on direct rule so it becomes accountable,” the party leader told the launch event in Belfast.

“At least that would give us government.

“We can’t go on as we are - stuttering from crisis to crisis, stuttering from scandal to scandal.”